From Psychology to Poetics: Aging as a Literary Process

Abstract
In the emerging field of narrative gerontology, psychological models of self are giving way to literary ones. Viewing the experience of aging through literary lenses presents a number of intriguing conceptual possibilities. In this paper, the authors identify points of intersection between narrative gerontology and literary theory that illuminate a process central to what they call a poetics of aging - reading the self. In particular, they speculate on how, by framing such concepts as meaning, memory, and time in narrative terms, gerontology can move toward a more comprehensive, more nuanced understanding of what aging entails.
Notes
ID: 357051008
Year of Publication
2007
Journal
Journal of Aging, Humanities, and the Arts
Volume
1
Issue
3-4
Pagination
3-4
Publication Language
EN
ISBN Number
1932-5614
McKim, Elizabeth, and William Randall. 2007. “From Psychology To Poetics: Aging As A Literary Process”. Journal Of Aging, Humanities, And The Arts 1 (3-4): 3-4.
Journal Article